o o Univ. of Oregon Library EUGEME, 03S30N dtav lijtt Hmt i CMfc-dl C;sjee fhrttgA 5arsy. High teweesatoM to 54. Low, U to 30. TIN High yesterday, 57 degrees. Low la ft night, 31 degrees. Sunset today, 6:06. Sunrise tomorrow, 7:33, PDT. Hi and Lo SERVING BEND AND CENTRAL OREGON 60th Year Ten Pages Friday, October 25, 1963 Ten Cents No. 273 O THE IBULXJE Commission orders deep welfare SALEM (UPI) - The Public Welfare Commission to day slashed the general as sistance program which has zoomed 5243,071 over budget in the past three months, and ordered a $1.8 million cutback in the two-year budget because of last week's tax election de feat. The general assistance pro gram, over budget $49,164 for September alone, and spiraling medical costs forced commis sioners to admit there may be serious budget problems ahead in addition to those resulting from the defeat of the tax measure Payments for drugs for wel fare recipients were ordered placed on a pro-rate basis be cause this item was $41,847 over budget for the first three Bomb scare delay T I 'S I ITO deparfure NEW YORK (UPI) - A bomb scare held up the depart ure of visiting Yugoslav Presi dent Tito for 40 minutes today while scores of police searched the liner Rotterdam. The Holland - America Lines vessel sailed with Tito and his wife, Jovanka, aboard at 12:40 p.m. EDT after city chief of detectives declared the ship safe, as far as we are con cerned." The all-out search began when the .Coast ujrd Teceived an anonymous telephone call say ing a bomb had been placed aboard the Rotterdam set to ex plode at 4 p.m. EDT. The ship had been given a routine check early this morning by security officers. 'Poiitive Feelings' But Tito departed "with very positive feelings" about his visit and told a breakfast party at tended by 200 Yugoslav consu lar and U. N. staff members that he believed his trip "will be a useful contribution to peace." Tito left after receiving a message from President Ken nedy wishing him a "bon voy age." "We are leaving this country with a fine impression despite some provocation from a small element," he said. Kennedy telephoned Tito Thursday to wish him a pleas ant trip home and to help sweeten any sour feelings over the incidents. There were more Thursday followed by seven ar rests. It was the second time dur ing Tito's visit here that Presi dent Kennedy took a personal interest in Tito's welfare. Earlier in the week Kennedy telephoned his concern to Adlai E. Stevenson, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Questionnaire printed Would you favor city-operated bus? The questionnaire below seeks to determine how Bend residents feel about the resumption of city bus service under city control. Last spring a privately-owned sen-ice col lapsed from financial difficulties. Since then the City has received several requests to step in and run the service itself. Budget committees in future years could provide for the support of a city bus system if voters approve. But the question among city commissioners now is whether there is sufficient need for public transportation to justify city operation. This questionnaire will be influential in a decision. Do you (favor) (oppose) city bus service? If favored, would you use the service? (yes) (no) Approximately how many diys in a week mould you mm the serriceT At which particular houri of the day? o14 you favor city or prlvtte ownership? Woul'd, vvoa iV-inr, to )'e the city? use ftftSt fi!WK$.t .f8M upgiy kbes? jJ - cu ts months of the biemiium. the commission will pay t h e i full drug billings if they do not a ,...). iui. ,... CAV.CCU LUC UUUKCL OllVUMCIll, UUl ! - pro-rated redactions will be i be sold in 25 different stores to- mine and flooded its lower lev made arbitrarily in the future I night at 27 cents each. els. when riniff hillines exceed the amount bndreted. Also over budget by $74,359 J c for the past three months are old age assistance medical pay ments. Trouble Ahead "We may be headed for trouble. Frankly we are going to have to watch this," Welfare Administrator Andrew Juras said. In addition, Juras noted nurs ing home costs were "steadily increasing." and were $71,681 over budget for the past three months. Juras warned serious budget problems could result in t h e nursing home budgets if state hospitals, as a r e s u 1 1 of cut backs, began transferring in mates lo nursing homes. Juras said increased migra tions of people from California were increasing the general as sistance costs. The commission voted to put austerity program cuts totaling $4.5 million into effect Nov. 1. Of this amount, $1.8 million is from the state's general fund, and the rest matching funds about $2 million from the fed eral government, and $612,000 from counties. Cuts outlined under the austerity program eliminate 54 now vacant positions, and force a delay In filling nine others. Oxford research notes possible fluoride danger LONDON (UPI) Three Ox ford researchers said today they have laboratory evidence that sodium fluoride of one-twemietn of the strength of fluoridated drinking water inhibits the growth of human cells. Writing in the British Medi cal Journal, Dr. Roger Berry, Helen Hay Whitney and Wilfred Trillwood said their findings did not necessarily mean fluoridat ed water is unsafe. But they said they believed more re search into the effects of fluor ide is needed. "This is probably the first in dication of the toxicity of fluor ide in high dilution to human and animal cells in a test tube environment," they said. "The test tube conditions may not re produce the condition which ex ists in the human body where body cells may be protected from the harmful effects of drugs and chemicals by protec tive mechanisms. But the exist ence and nature of fluoride pro tective mechanisms are matters more for speculation than of fact." Harvesf Day spuds to be sold fonighf Twelve hundred sacks of ,ro tatoes were to be trucked into town this afternoon, to be sold, at cost, to the many people ex pected downtown tonight for Bend's 1963 Harvest Day pro gram. Rut the sacks are not of the 100-pound variety. Each of the 1200 sacks ob-j tained by the Bend Chamber of j Commerce merchants' commit- i : tee from the Fred Hodecker i W a r e h o u s e in Redmond weighs ten pounds. All hold j choice notatoos. The sacks will i ine Doiaioes were Drouent in : town by Bend - Portland Truck ?c . ' '"'""' " tritiiitari irt Ilia nQrhoinalmn c..; u: - i j: tributed to the participating stores. The potatoes will be sold only between the hours of 6 and 9 p.m., Bob Somerville, chairman of the Bend Cham bers merchants' committee, has announced. A highlight of the Harvest Day program this evening will be a display of new automobiles on a roped-off section of Ore gon Avenue. The automobile show will start at 5:30 p.m. There was a bit of autumn chill in the air this morning, to remind Central Oregonians that Harvest Days are really here. A few flakes of snow fell in Bend, between rare splashes of sunshine. FDA, AMA join in fight against quack products WASHINGTON (UPI)-Health quackery is at least a billion- dollar annual business that sometimes kills its victims, top level government officials said today. Opening the second annual National Congress on Medical Quackery. Welfare Secretary Anthony J. Celebrezze said the gullible buyer of useless and sometimes dangerous products for which extravagant claims are made "is not only fleeced of the price of a nostrum. . .but is also deprived of consider able benefits of modern medi cine." The meeting to emphasize the dangers of quackery was co-sponsored by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the American Medical As sociation (AMA). Across town, one target of the double-barrelled quackery attack the National Health Federation (NHF) set up shop for a convention of its own, called the "National Congress on Health Monopoly." It at tacked the AMA, contending medical doctors themselves were guilty of promoting use less drugs. FDA Commissioner George P. Larrick, joining Celebrezze in attacking quackery, directly referred to NHF. He derided its claims of promoting freedom of choice in the health field and said it was "one of a number of so-called health and nutri tion organizations which are not all that they claim to be." Besides the NHF. the AMA came under attack trom a spokesman for a chiropractors' group. He charged that some surgeons perform unnecessary operations on patients in order to collect the high fees. Clocks go back to PST on Sunday By United Press International Daylight saving time, not long ago a touchy topic in Oregon, comes to a peaceful end for the year Sunday. This was the first year in three years that Oregon had uniform time throughout the late spring, summer and early fall. A 1961 legislative act permitt ed five counties to adopt fast time. Thev did. So did some others, although they weren't sunposed to. this resulted in confusion in 1961 and 1962. So voters last year approved daylight time for the entire state. They had it ending in the last week of September. The 1963 legislature took care of the rest extending it until the last last week of October to conform with othei-. states that moved up the clock. Sometime Saturday night r- dents are supposed to more thS'i ciock DacK an war. Seven miners are rescued in Germany PEINE. Germany (UPI) Work crews tonight rescued sev en miners who had been trapped for 23 hours 180 feet below the ground in a flooded iron mine. The seven men were hauled to the surface in rescue cap- sules at 7 p.m. They were among 50 miners trapped Thursday night when a huge wall of sludge slid into the mic ui other 43 miners, and it was feared they were dead. The men became trapped by an earth slide Thursday night at the Lengede-Broistedt mine, 10 miles south of Peine in West Germany's province of Lower Saxony. A full shift of 129 men went to work in the mine at 2 p.m. Thursday, and all were there at 8 p.m. when tons of watery sludge, mud, and rocks cascaded into the 100-yard-decp pit. Seventy - nine men escaped, struggling to the surface through tubes of the mine's ex haust and ventilation system or climbing rope ladders lowered from the surface. Electric System Out The mud slide short-circuited the mine's electric system and stalled elevators that might have saved all the miners in minutes, a spokesman for the owners said. The management of the II seder Mine Co., here in Peine organized rescue operations. Rescue teams drilled through the night to bore a six -inch hole down to the 60-yard level of the mine. "They could hear noises down there," the spokesman said. A field telephone was low ered. Seconds later, a voice crackled up to the surface on the phone: "There are seven of us down here. We can't see any others." The spokesman said the lower level of the mine still was flooded this morning and said that if the missing men were at the bottom "they are prob ably dead." Sandwiches Sent Down Rescuers lowered sandwiches and water to the trapped men and concentrated on widening the six-inch hole so rescue cap sules could be put down to bring the still-living miners to the surface. "We're okay and the atmos phere is good," one of the trap ped men reported to tne sur face by phone. Vance hails success of giant 'lift' FRANKFURT, Germany (UPI) U.S. Army Secretary Cyrus R. Vance, hailing the success of exercise Big Lift said today America plans to stage similar giant aerial troop movements to the Pacilic and probably also to the Middle East next year. Shortly after arriving here lo inspect troop units in the Big Lift exercise, Vance told news men the United States has no intention of reducing its com bat strength in Europe. He said the Army will keep its present force of five divi sions and four tank regiments here indefinitely. Vance was asked whether the Defense Department and the Army conducted Big utt as a forerunner to possible troop withdrawals. ... "No," he said, "it was a test of our ability to reinforce (Eu ropean garrisons) rapidly. "We have no intention of withdrawing any of our six division equivalent already here." In Operation Big Lift, com pleted almost nine hours ahead of schedule Thursday, the 15, 000 men of the U.S. 2nd Ar mored Division were flown from Texas to Western Europe in 63 hours and 5 minutes. Vance was asked about Dep uty Defense Secretary Roswell L. Gilpatric's statement Satur day to the annual conference of United Press International pub lishers and editors in Chicago that Big Lift suggests the Unit ed States "should be able to make useful reductions in its heavy overwas military expen ditures vitkort diminishing its Vf:tiv MUbf strength or its cMrr anlv that srrwg viAty tb gipport of ivs trortj, wtrtt tjqjjy commit- o rwjwv 100 mile an hour winds grains eras ''yjl ' P t W v ' -" - QUAIL CRASH . INTO WINDOW Confused quail crashed into a window of the Wagner Supermarket lit eastside Bene) early this morning, and two were killed. Holding the fat birds is Henry Greening, a department head at the market. The but did not damage the glass. confusion of the birds. ms&B&iiMiaxMN Deer runs through downtown areai Quail crash into store window By Phil F. Brogan Bulletin Staff Writer Quail crashed into a Bend store window in "waves" this morning, a deer ran tnrougn the downtown area, and high overhead a flight of geese wing ed into the south. The quail flew into a front window of the Wagner Super market store in eastside Bend, with the first flock striking the glass at about 7:30 a.m. There were six in the flight, and one was killed. Fifteen minutes la ter, there was another crash of quail into the window, then at 8 a.m. came the final "wave," with another left dead. Two young men ilitant mob after address DALLAS (UPI) Adlai Ste- venson, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, gave an opti ministic view of the U.N.'s rec ord of preserving peace Thurs day night, then had to fight his way through a militant mob that cursed, booed, beat and spat on him. Outnumbered police tried to escort him to a waiting limou sine. But a woman rushed up and rapped Stevenson on the head with an anti-U.N. placard. Two young men spat in his face. Police arrested a 22-year-old North Texas State University student. They said he would be charged with inciting to riot and aggravated assault on Ste venson. About 70 demonstrators shoved and jostled Slevenson, who spoke to commemorate the U.N. Day in Texas. Blames Walker Followers "It was a concerted action by members of (former Maj Gen.) Edwin Walker's follow ing and the John Birchers, Jack Goren. president of the sponsoring Dallas U.N. Associ ation, said. "All they've done Is disgrace Dallas and the good manners of Texans and Americans." Stevenson said he did not un movos Reflected sunrise tints on clouds was a possible factor in the Members of the store staff are at a loss to explain the crash of the birds into the glass it never happened be fore. There were no lights in side the store when the first flight hit the glass. A cloud re flection, in the rising sun, might have been a factor, spectators agreed. The plate glass window was not damaged. Shortly after 8:30 this morn ing. The Bulletin received a flurry of calls from local resi dents who had stopped a deer running through downtown Bend. The doe was first sighted near the Pine Tavern. It ran spaf in his face in Dallas abuses in support of United Nations derstand why persons of differ ent points of view showed such bad manners. Frank B. McGehce, leader of a conservative movement known as the National Indigna tion Convention, rose from the second row of Dallas Memorial Auditorium as Stevenson pre pared to start speaking. Damp wsathor seen for area Forecasts Indicate that the fi nal weekend of October will be damp in the Oregon country. The prediction Is for "more than normal rain, mostly after Sunday." West of the moun tains, the total Is expected to be between one and three Inch es, with at least half an Inch east of the Cascades. Temperatures will be on the cool side, The "pinpoint" forecast for Bend notes a chance for a few light showers through Saturday. Light showers fell in the area Thursday, but Bend measured only a trace, for the third consecutive day, The storm brought light snow lo higher elevations of the ten - tral Oregon cascades. toward! mm quail hit the window in waves, past the Pilot Butte Inn corner toward Greenwood, then north past Eddie's and the court house. Later, the doc was reported from the northeast part of Bend. Persons there said the doe apparently was sick, or had been shot. Oregon Stale Police were notified. Geese observed this morning were flying high, headed in the general direction of Summer Lake. The flight was small com pared with the great flights of snow geese that passed over the area this past week, also headed south. Adlai Stevenson "Mr. Ambassador," McGehce said, "I have a question." I will be glad to give you equal time when I am through, Stevenson said. Again McGchee rose and started to address Stevenson. "Throw him out," cried per sons throughout the crowd of 5,000, "I don't have to come from Illinois to teach Texans man ners, do I?" Stevenson asked. Escorted From Hall Police escorted McGehee out of the hall. Members of conservative or ganizations sat in scattered parts of the auditorium, many waved American flags and some Confederate banners. Ste venson had to stop speaking several times because of hiss ing, booing and cat-calls. Stevenson said differences be tween Communist China and Russia are deep and serious and because of them "the cold war will never be the same again. We are moving into a new era He said the atmosphere In the U.N. was the best since 1946 because all nations were talking the language of diplo macy. He termed the woria or ganization a soud investment 1 costing about $100 million year. t Storm sends many fleeing ower areas CHARLESTON, S. C. (UPI) Hurricane Ginny aimed its loo mile an hour winds at the Carolinas' coastline today, forc ing thousands to flee to higher grounds. A noon EDT advisory located Ginny 65 miles southeast of Charleston and the weather bureau said the center of the storm likely would move inland tonight between Myrtle Beach, S. C. and Wilmington, V. C. Police with louds; eakers toured the low - lying ocean areas around Charleston, urging residents to get out and by noon. Thousands heeded the warning, packed a few belong ings, and headed tor inland shelters. A siren screamed steadily at Folly Beach, jutting out into the Atlantic just south of Charleston. "This means get the hell out," a Civil Defense spokes man said. ' Gale Force Winds Gale force winds and pound ing surf hit all along the coast line. Extensive flooding with tides up 8 feet above normal was forecast for portions of the South Carolina coast. Ginny, the season's seventh hurricane, sprang up off the North Carolina coast Sunday night, backtracked slowly to the south and meanaced the Florida mainland before turning again to threaten the Carolinas. The noon EDT advisory said the storm was moving on a north - northeast course at 8 miles per hour and would con tinue on this course for the next 18 hours. Civil Defense officials at Charleston said that evacuation of about 10,000 persons on is lands and beach fronts in the path of Ginny was nearly com pleted shortly before noon. Head for Shelters The refugees headed for 'St igh school building shelters in the greater Charleston area manned by Red Cross person nel. About B.uon ot the persons are residents of beach homes and others lived in homes they feared would not stand up to the stiff winds. All counties within 100 miles of Charleston were advised to close schools by noon and get school buses off the highways as soon as possible. Residents of resort islands and other low lying areas around this historic seaport city boarded up their homes and headed for inland shelters. Police and firemen moved up and down Folly Beach, Isle of Palms and Sullivans Island in loudspeaker trucks urging about 10,000 winter residents of ths islands to move to higher ground. Refugee centers were set up at school houses inland and au thorities hoped to complete the evacuation by noon. Tides as much as nine feet above normal were predicted for areas along the boutn Car olina coast. Red Cross shelters were or dered set up in the Charleston area by noon EDT to feed and house the persons wno uea from the lowlands. Chief J. M. Bunch of the Folly Beach police department said his men were using school buses to transport the evac uees. "The seas are plenty rough and we're getting plenty ot rain," he said. "We're getting the people out as fast as we can." DOW-JONES AVERAGES Dow Jones final stock aver ages: 30 industrials 755.61, up 3.81; 29 railroads 171.50, off 0.54; 15 utilities 138.41, un changed, and 65 stocks 264.01, up 0.58. Sales today were about 6.39 million shares compared with 6.28 million shares Thursday. Q o